Bike path between Möllevången and Rosengård
Commissioned by the City of Malmö Unsworn Industries is running a project aiming at contributing to the development of Rosengårdsstråket – a bike path that stretches between Möllevången and Rosengård in Malmö. Expected outcome of the project is a number of interaction design concepts which in the next phase can be implemented, and set up along the pathway. The overall project aim is to stimulate movements, and increase the connection between the inner city and the suburbs to create a more sustainable city.
The concepts are developed in a prototype-oriented, interative design process. Besides City of Malmö and Unsworn Industries other partners involved in the project are Urban Art Solutions, Medea, Malmö University, and Do-Fi.
Workshops and prototypes
Up to now two workshops have been organised, and a number of prototypes designed and tested.
Prototyping sessions
Workshop # 1 on April 28, 2011
Workshop # 2 on May 12, 2011
During 2011 we will develop and try out new - pragmatic and extravagant - ways of visualising the history of the 700-year-old Bohus fortress.
IKON is an EU-financed project with the aim to strengthen the tourism industry by developing new technologies, tools and solutions that enhance visitors’ experiences of historical sites, and cultural attractions. The project has 47 participating organisations from Norway, Denmark, and Sweden. As a part of IKON National Property Board Sweden (Statens Fastighetsverk) and the City of Kungälv have commissioned Unsworn Industries, in collaboration with Testbedstudioand Terje Östling, to develop and prototype a wide range of visualisation concepts at Bohus fortress in western Sweden.
The fortress was built in 1308 by the Norwegian King Håkon V. With its strategic location, next to the river Nordre Älv, and close to the borders of Denmark, Norway and Sweden, it has played an important role in Nordic power struggles. The fortress was besieged fourteen times, but has never been taken. In 1789 it was closed down and left to decay. Today the fortress is the main attraction of the city of Kungälv and open to visitors during the summer.
A range of events, activities, and guided tours are today offered to people visiting the fortress. IKON aim, by means of low and high tech innovations, to enhance the public activities to attract more visitors, both tourists and locals. How can we bring to life the historical treasures hidden behind the walls of the fortress without disturbing a sensitive site?
Our first experiment is a, yet unnamed, Mobile panorama application for smart phones and tablets that visualises, site-specific historical views, and layers. Inspired by the Parascope the app displays multiple panoramic visualisations of how the fortress might have looked like in the past. The users can immediately compare these views with the current millieu.
Another experiment, the Fickla Walk, explores ultra-violet (UV) torches and ink. When walking the walk using the torch to light up the UV markings, hidden messages are discovered, secrets revealed, and stories told. We have developed prototypes of both production methods and storytelling techniques. We are also researching how the UV-materials might affect these fragile historical environments.
On-site prototyping sessions in March and April 2011:
UPDATE: Check out these videos from the user-testing!
In the end of March, the City of Malmö hosted a meeting with delegates from the network Cities for Children. The aim of this European network is to offer cities the possibility to exchange, and develop progressive concepts across national borders on how to promote the well-being of children, young persons and parents in the urban environment.
In connection to the meeting Unsworn Industries organised a panorama workshop with a focus on developing multi-functional outdoor environments for children as well as office workers. The goal of the workshop was not only to discuss design matters, but also to get the chance to try out, and experiment with a new kind of tool for prototype-oriented city development, and citizen-dialogue - that is, the Parascope.
One hour panorama workshop
The set-up of the panorama workshop is based upon experiences made, and learnings gained from previous panorama workshops, e.g. in Gothenburg in collaboration with the Ingrepp research group, in Alnarp at the Movium conference, or in Nydala in collaboration with Medea.
The design brief handed out to the workshop participants was:
Re-design the yard outside the City hall into a multi-functional outdoor space to be used by kindergarten children, civil servants, and the general public.
The actual site they were to re-design was located just outside the window where the workshop took place. One hour was the impossibly short amount of time they had to their disposal to come up with a design proposal. The participants were working in groups of four, and visualised, tested, re-tested their proposals by sketching, drawing collages on panoramic images of the physical site. The panoramas they produced were digitalised, and uploaded on-line, as well as into a Parascope for swift comparison on-site, outdoors on the yard
Despite the tight workshop schedule, time-wise speakting, there were some very interesting ideas, and design-proposals developed. The workshop participants stated that they clearly could see benefits of applying this methodology in urban planning processes. They saw potentials in using the Parascope, and organising panorama workshops both when it comes to collaborative design processes involving urban planners and citizens, as well as when communicating ideas, and forthcoming changes.
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